| Water testing can tell you if mercury is in your water supply. Then
you can install the appropriate water filter system to remove
it.
Before the days of digital thermometers, many of us grew up
being poked and prodded with mercury-filled glass tubes whenever
we came down with a sniffle. Nowadays, the mercury thermometer
has all but gone the way of the horse and buggy with good
reason: Mercury is highly toxic.
While mercury occurs naturally in the earth's crust, the vast
majority of contamination occurs via human activity. What
are the major sources of mercury pollution?
• Coal-burning power plants
• The incineration of hazardous waste
• Chlorine production
• Cement manufacturing
• Municipal landfills
• Metal refining
• Sewage
The EPA enforces standards called Maximum Contaminant Levels,
or MCLs. The MCL for mercury is set at 2 parts per billion,
a limit exceeded by only a couple of drops in an Olympic-sized
swimming pool. Today, many municipalities are encouraging
residents to dispose of old mercury thermometers, dry-cell
batteries, fluorescent light bulbs and switches at designated
disposal sites for hazardous waste.
The Health Risks
Mercury is a neurotoxin, which means that it affects the nervous
system. The common term "mercury poisoning" refers to the
effect of over-exposure on the human nervous system, organs
and other bodily functions. In fact, the famous phrase, "Mad
as a Hatter," was a direct result of this.
Once upon a time, craftsmen in the 1800s who made hats by
hand were exposed to mercury in the felting process, as they
rubbed mercury into cloth to preserve it. As a result, mercury
poisoning commonly caused trembling, anxiety, personality
shifts and dementia and the Mad Hatter was born.
Today, mercury poisoning manifests itself in many forms:
Acute Exposure: This involves exposure to high doses of mercury
over a short period of time. Exposure can occur when drinking
highly contaminated water, inhaling high levels of mercury
vapor, or if children play with mercury. Nausea, vomiting,
diarrhea and severe kidney damage may also occur.
Chronic Exposure: This form of poisoning happens when exposure
to contamination occurs repeatedly or over an extended period.
Eating too much contaminated fish or drinking repeatedly from
a polluted water supply can lead to chronic mercury poisoning.
Nervous system damage, kidney disease, birth defects, dental
problems, mood swings, mental changes, hallucinations, memory
loss, nerve damage and the inability to concentrate can occur.
Symptoms also include tremors, loss of dermal sensitivity,
slurred speech and, in rare cases, even death and paralysis.
Protect Your Family
For starters, you may want to rethink how much fish, if any,
should be in your family's diet. Taking mercury exposure into
consideration, the concept of fish as "brain food" takes on
a whole new meaning.
Be sure to test your home's drinking water at least once a
year for dangerous contaminants, like mercury. Remember, mercury
is considered harmful at level higher than 2 parts per billion.
There is no way to detect it, other than through analysis
in a laboratory.
Be smart and be safe.
|